Friday, May 31, 2013

I borrow this old expression from Sesame Street to present a contrast that is indicative of the health care environment in the US, made all the more poignant by the fact that this is occurring in our nation's capital.

This is United Medical Center, a safety net hospital serving one the poorest parts of the District of Columbia. The Washington Post reports that the District paid $12 million to Huron Healthcare to operate the hospital and make recommendations for its future.

Under its contract, Huron assumed management of United Medical Center in
late March. It is undertaking a “strategic review” of the hospital’s
operations and is expected to develop a proposal to help turn around the
hospital in the coming weeks for the approval of the hospital’s board
in July.

That UMC is failing financially is a multifaceted problem, but it basically a result of the structure of compensation provided to safety net hospitals. The body politic in DC--including the US Congress and the current Administration--has failed to deal with the issue. The result is a degradation in the quality and availability of service to people in this neighborhood. As I have said: The DC government and local constituencies will only solve UMC's
problems when the federal government makes the proper commitment to
providing the poor people in this part of the District with "a
full-service hospital east of the Anacostia River."

Meanwhile, look what's happening a few miles away, as a result of the kind of federal commitment that can send tens of millions of dollars to wasteful clinical endeavors. This is MedStar Georgetown University Hospital:

This is Sibley Memorial Hospital, affiliated with Johns Hopkins Medicine:

This is a map of their relative locations, about 3 miles apart:

The two hospitals have both just received permission from the District of Columbia to install proton beam radiation therapy machines, at a total cost of $153 million. The Postnotes:

The decision has been closely followed by health experts because critics say it reflects a nationwide
medical arms race, as hospitals scramble for dominance by investing
millions of dollars in technology that has not been proven to be better
than cheaper alternatives for some cancers.

"Neither [Hopkins nor MedStar] should be building," says Dr.
Ezekiel Emanuel, a former health care adviser to the Obama
administration who is now at the University of Pennsylvania. "We don't
have evidence that there's a need for them in terms of medical care.
They're simply done to generate profits."

Meanwhile, another facility, the Maryland Proton Treatment Center, is already being built 40 miles away in downtown Baltimore.

The organization that is making this possible is CMS, which has set rates for use of proton beams for "normal" cancer therapy that far exceed their value compared to traditional forms of radiotherapy.

Dr. Emanuel was a key advisor to President Obama on health care issues. He and others in the administration have had years to fix this problem, but they have not. When I recently asked a high ranking CMS official why they didn't act to change this payment scheme, s/he answered, "I think you know the reason why." The reason why, obviously, was that political pressure from those who stand to benefit from the medical arms race have enough influence on the federal agencies to protect the status quo.

When we compare the outright waste of tens of millions of dollars on duplicate machines of unproven clinical effectiveness with the human suffering that results from the degradation of places like United Medical Center, we see political corruption of the highest order. I am not suggesting personal corruption, nor I am suggesting that either political party is solely responsible. I am suggesting corruption of political processes to protect the strong, big, and well connected at the expense of the poor and less powerful.

Thursday, May 30, 2013

My book Goal Play!, which has been available for some time only on Amazon (in print and Kindle versions), is now available at Smashwords in almost in any e-book format you might desire: Apple iPad/iBooks, Nook, Sony Reader, Kobo, and most e-reading apps including Stanza, Aldiko, Adobe Digital Editions. Here's your chance to add it to your digital library.

(My other book, How a Blog held off the Most Powerful Union in America, is also available on Amazon in print and Kindle versions and on Smashwords in all of these e-book formats.)

This webinar is based on Dr. Hartzband's work as PI for a grant
entitled “An Identity Ecosystem for Patient-Centered Coordination of
Care.” He will describe how two health information exchanges link with a
unique policy-enabled authentication, authorization,
and identity proofing system that can gather and utilize identity
attributes from disparate sources and use them to provide a very high
level of assurance for cyber identities. This systems-based approach can
be useful to consider in many other industries.

Dr. Hartzband will discuss several use cases from the grant pilot, as well as the following topics:
• The need for trusted identities in healthcare (and elsewhere)

@JordanRau at @KHNews (Kaiser Health News) has correctly framed the public policy issue raised by a new report:

The idea that uneven Medicare health care spending around the country
is due to wasteful practices and overtreatment—a concept that
influenced the federal health law -- takes another hit in a study published Tuesday.
The paper concludes that health differences around the country explain
between 75 percent and 85 percent of the cost variations

“People really are sicker in some parts of the country,” said Dr. Patrick Romano, one of the authors.That’s a sour assessment for those hoping to wring large savings out
of the health care system by making it more efficient. Some, such as
President Barack Obama’s former budget director, Peter Orszag, assert
that geographic variations in spending could mean that nearly a third of Medicare spending may be unnecessary.

I hold no brief for this study, or for the previous ones by the folks at Dartmouth. What I view as interesting is the manner in which public policy in the health care arena is or is not whipsawed by the latest study. What would happen now if a major part of the framework for ACOs, risk-based contracting, and increased concentration of the health care industry is viewed as up for grabs?

Here's what I predict. That re-evaluation will not happen, at least right away. The new report will be viewed as politically incorrect, disagreeably contradicting the current views of many parties who now have a vested interest in the new direction of the national health care system. It's methodology will be critiqued by those benefiting from the new status quo--just as the Dartmouth report was critiqued for many years with those benefiting from the old status quo. Then, the conclusions will take hold, and policy will shift again.

It takes a while for a pendulum to reach its high point and for momentum to shift, but gravity is not just a good idea: It's the law.

The e-pages have been full of stories about the statements made by the CEO of Abercrombie, e.g., “Candidly, we go after the cool kids. We go after the attractive
all-American kid with a great attitude and a lot of friends. A lot of
people don’t belong [in our clothes], and they can’t belong” and “I don’t want our core customers to see people who aren’t as hot as them wearing our clothing.”

He also said that the communication between "hot people" is his primary marketing tactic: “It’s almost everything. That’s why we hire good-looking people in
our stores. Because good-looking people attract other good-looking
people, and we want to market to cool, good-looking people. We don’t
market to anyone other than that,” he said.

Here's a first-person validation of this from a young friend of mine:

The first time I went in to buy a pair of shorts and the woman at
the counter asked if I lived around here. Right after I said yes, she
asked if I needed a summer job and said I would be "great." I remember
her actually making me feel really good! I decided to take it and went
back to the store for an "interview" where they asked about my personal
style, but I remember feeling very uncomfortable. She took a photo of me
to send to the national office, they recruit all of their models from
their stores. They told me my title would be "store model" where I would
just greet people who came in. I went back another time to buy clothing
for the position (over 90 dollars, they didn't have my discount in the
system yet) and everyone there told me not to take the job. They kept
everyone who was not white in the back room of the store as well. They
seemed extremely unhappy. I called and said I wasn't going to take the
position and went to a different Abercrombie to return the clothing. As
soon as I walked in, an employee followed me around the store to the
register and asked me if I lived around here, and then immediately
offered me a summer job

It's hard to know what to do to counter this approach and the CEO's view of the world. After all, if you're not "hot" or "cool," a boycott won't do much good! One person has creatively taken on a subversive crusade to create a "brand readjustment." Check out this article. Excerpt:

Greg Karber posted a YouTube video entitled “Abercrombie & Fitch
Gets a Brand Readjustment #FitchTheHomeless,” which asks the public to
go to their local thrift shops and purchase all of the Abercrombie &
Fitch they can possibly grab and distribute the clothes to the
homeless.

“Together, we can make Abercrombie & Fitch the world’s number one brand of homeless apparel,” Karber says in the video.

This is a big deal. For a number of years, people have been arguing over the issue of whether screening patients for methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus, orMRSA, with subsequent isolation, would be better than a generalized (non-pathogen specific) infection control approach. As explained by Edmond and Wenzel, that study concluded:

Active detection and isolation without decolonization was not effective
in reducing rates of MRSA-positive clinical cultures, MRSA bloodstream
infections, or bloodstream infections from any pathogen. In contrast,
targeted and universal decolonization resulted in significant reductions
in MRSA-positive clinical cultures and bloodstream infections from any
pathogen but not MRSA bloodstream infections; however, the effect of
universal decolonization was greater than the effect of targeted
decolonization.

The study design was as follows:

We conducted a pragmatic, cluster-randomized trial. Hospitals were
randomly assigned to one of three strategies, with all adult ICUs in a
given hospital assigned to the same strategy. Group 1 implemented MRSA
screening and isolation; group 2, targeted decolonization (i.e.,
screening, isolation, and decolonization of MRSA carriers); and group 3,
universal decolonization (i.e., no screening, and decolonization of all
patients). Proportional-hazards models were used to assess differences
in infection reductions across the study groups, with clustering
according to hospital.

The results:

Universal decolonization resulted in a significantly greater reduction
in the rate of all bloodstream infections than either targeted
decolonization or screening and isolation.

(Note: Universal decolonization was accomplished with intranasal mupirocin for 5 days and chlorhexidine bathing for the entire ICU stay.)

The editorial concludes (with my emphasis):

The implications of this study are highly important. The lack of
effectiveness of active detection and isolation should prompt hospitals
to discontinue the practice for control of endemic MRSA. A benefit will
be a reduced proportion of patients requiring contact precautions, which
is a patient-unfriendly practice that interferes with care.
In addition, the folly of pursuing legislative mandates when evidence
is lacking has been shown, and laws mandating MRSA screening should be
repealed.

Lastly, this study has implications beyond MRSA. New
resistance mechanisms continue to emerge in nosocomial pathogens. The
recent dissemination of carbapenem-resistant Enterobacteriaceae has
stimulated calls to implement active detection and isolation for these
organisms. We hope that the results of this study will redirect that
discussion and reinforce the utility of horizontal interventions to
control not only the pathogens of today but those of tomorrow as well.

Tuesday, May 28, 2013

Please take a look over at Athenahealth's Leadership Forum: A new post about common lessons about dysfunctional teams and leaders from sewage treatment (really!), the IRS (also!), and hospitals (of course!).

Do you have the same reaction as I when you read this New York Times article? Excerpts:Some of the brokerage firms that helped pique Americans' interest in
stocks are now luring them into something much riskier: stock options.

As the stock market soars to new heights, E*Trade, Ameritrade and Charles Schwab
are advertising the potential rewards of options, which give buyers the
right to buy or sell stocks at predetermined prices in the future.
Options, like their cousins, futures, have traditionally been the domain
of Wall Street traders. But the brokerage firms say futures and options
can be profitable for ordinary investors, too — a claim that, while
true, does not square with many investors’ actual experience.

Options? Come on. Most individual investors don't even know how to pick individual stocks, much less try to determine potential future valuations that would justify options. The chance of financial disaster is high. The article continues:

Analysis done for The New York Times by SigFig, a company that tracks
200,000 retail investors, showed that people who traded options last
year received only about one-fifth the returns of people who did not
trade options: 1.1 percent compared to 5.1 percent.

All this is driven by greed, of course.

[E]xpansion of this business . . . has clearly been an area of growth. An analysis of scattered data
from company filings and presentations indicates that derivatives
trading, which includes options, has risen at all the major firms since
the financial crisis of 2008, which left many Americans with big losses
in their investment portfolios.

At Ameritrade, which has been the most aggressive, derivatives trades
accounted for about 40 percent of all customer trades last year — more
than double what it was just five years ago. A vast majority of those
trades were in options.

The growth has been a big help for the online brokers at a time when
stock trading has fallen. The commission on the average options trade is
more than twice that on the average stock trade.

When a friend saw the Times article, she wrote me, "Aha! You have just explained why my assigned Ameritrade 'advisor' keeps
bugging me and specifically suggested options a while ago. I know enough
to know that's not for me."

But others are not so wary. How can this be happening in an era of greater consumer protection in financial markets? Well, that protection has not been forthcoming. CNBC explains:

Dodd-Frank
authorized the SEC to impose a fiduciary standard on brokers. But the
agency, swamped with other rule-making related to the act, has so far
done little.

Under such a standard, hundreds of thousands of brokers would be legally
obligated to act in their clients' best interests when recommending
investment products. The most important change for consumers is that
they would have greater legal standing to sue in cases where they had
evidence they had been wronged.

At the moment, brokers (including people working for big Wall Street
firms), small locally owned brokerages and insurers are obliged only to
recommend "suitable" products.

The new SEC chairperson wants to fix this, but look who is lining up against her:

Various interest groups are hardening their stands. The most powerful
player is the Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association (SIFMA), which represents broker-dealers, including the big financial firms, such as Bank of America, Merrill Lynch and Charles Schwab. The stakes in an industry upheaval are big: According to Boston-based Aite Group,
about 450,000 people give consumers financial advice; 45,000 to 50,000
of them work as registered investment advisors (RIAs) , and the rest
operate under the aegis of broker-dealers.

Until and unless the government acts, caveat emptor--and the seller, too, when it comes to options.

Monday, May 27, 2013

The State House News reports that the Massachusetts Health Policy Commission "has chosen the proposed merger of the large Partners Healthcare System
and with the smaller South Shore Hospital for its first review . . . to examine the merger’s effects on costs and the health care market."

The HPC does not have veto authority over the merger. It can delay it slightly, as the transaction cannot proceed until 30 days after its report is issued. "If it chooses, the commission may refer findings to the state attorney general for action on behalf of health care consumers."

What do the parties to the merger say?

In a commission filing, Partners Vice President Brent Henry wrote that
the affiliation with South Shore “will enhance clinical care and is
intended to yield economic and operational efficiencies” that are
“expected to result in the delivery of high quality, cost effective
health care to all patients served by the parties in Southeastern
Massachusetts, expand access to needed health care services, and should
contribute, over time, to moderating the rate of growth in health care
expenditures for the benefit of patients and employers.” In a separate filing, Richard Aubut, president of South Shore Hospital,
used the exact same language to describe the anticipated impact of the
merger.

To understand this fully, we need to understand that South Shore has been a vassal of Partners for years, with extremely close clinical relationships and referral patterns. The Patriot Ledgerreported:

Sarah Darcy, spokeswoman for South Shore Hospital, said the two
hospitals have worked together since 2004 on providing a wide range of
medical and surgical care. Among them are the Dana-Farber/Brigham and
Women’s Cancer Center, the Breast Care Center, and a Harvard Medical
School-affiliated surgical residency program at South Shore Hospital.

(See here for more detail with regard to cancer care, and here for the very close residency program for obstetrics and gynecology.) Do you think it is a coincidence that it is only with the passage of the so-called "cost containment legislation" last summer that a formal merger is proceeding? That legislation provides the framework for "state action" that will insulate Partners from future anti-trust action in this transaction.

Why? Because the parties will be able to demonstrate "economic and operational efficiencies." Consider the expansion of the Partners' EHR system, purchasing, cost of capital, and the like to this community hospital. At a small marginal cost, SSH will accrue major marginal benefits. Expect Partners also to argue that consolidation will result in better care management for SSH's patients.

Who is going to make a counter case before the HPC and the AG? No other hospital system will attempt to intervene, for fear that whatever metrics it would propose for the HPC or AG to slow down the PHS-SSH merger would also be used to slow down growth of their ACOs.

The only hope for consumers in the state is real-time transparency of the actual prices paid for care in the various health care systems, accompanied by real-time quality data. Then, people would see that they are paying extra for little or nothing by insisting on insurance products with PHS doctors and hospitals. Then, insurance products with lower-cost limited networks with equal or higher quality might have a chance to grow.

Sunday, May 26, 2013

As noted previously, the Massachusetts legislature has entrusted the handling of the all-payer claims database (APCD) to a new independent state agency, CHIA (Center for Health Information and Analysis) which has issued proposed regulations concerning the availability of the data. Among the issues CHIA had to decide was what fee, if any, to charge for access to the data and the terms under which someone can request a waiver. Those regulations are here. Here is an excerpt:

The proposed fees reflect the cost of systems analysis, program development, computer production, vendors’ fees, consulting services and other costs related to the production of any requested data. The proposed fees are based upon four factors: (1) the type applicant requesting the data; (2) the type and number of data files requested; (3)the data elements requested; and (4) the number of years of data requested. The Center may reduce or waive the applicable fees for qualified applicants.

The Massachusetts Hospital Association recently filed complaints about some aspects of those regulations:

When CHIA released its initial proposed APCD
fee schedule in November 2012, a mid-size organization, such as a community hospital,
would have had to pay as much as $39,375 for just one year of restricted data,
which would be insufficient to study trends and analyze the impact of any interventions
over time. Such a hospital would have to pay multiple times for the data it needs.
Under CHIA’s new fee schedule, released this month, a provider organization
requesting restricted data from all categories would have to pay $40,500. And
while the proposed new fees were reduced for obtaining public, de-identified data,
it would still cost a provider organization up to $15,000 for a single year/single use.

“MHA appreciates that CHIA significantly
reduced the fees for researchers,” MHA’s Sr. Dir. of Managed Care Karen Granoff wrote in testimony in response to CHIA’s fee schedule. “Like researchers,
providers have a legitimate need to access the data for all of the purposes outlined
in Chapter 224, yet unless CHIA adjusts the fees and makes them more reasonable,
it is unlikely that many providers will be able to take advantage of this resource.”

Granoff noted that APCD costs in neighboring
New England states are significantly lower and she noted that hospitals already
pay an assessment to fund CHIA’s budget.

“The proposed fees will discourage use of the data by providers at
the same time that the state is trying to promote the use of transparency around
care delivery and to encourage care coordination and a transition to population-based
care delivery,” Granoff wrote. “It would be an unintended consequence if the
Commonwealth’s multi-year, ambitious effort to control healthcare costs were
to fail due to barriers to data access set up by the agency itself.”

I asked CHIA Commissioner Áron Boros if he would like to use this forum to respond to the MHA comments, and he kindly did so:

As we consider adjustment to the fee schedule in light of the
comments we received, we are conscious of CHIA's competing
responsibilities: to defray the operational costs of the APCD while also
maximizing its value by facilitating access to many diverse users.

Over
my term at CHIA, I am committed to continuously expanding the use of
our data resources. Novel uses of public assets like the APCD hold the
promise of accelerating improvements in cost and quality in
Massachusetts. Fees are necessary part of the investment needed to
support this future, but I welcome all thoughts on how to ensure such
fees are appropriate.

Having served in fee-based agencies, I am acutely aware of the trade-offs facing CHA. If it incurs direct costs in serving requests for data and does not have a state appropriation to pay those direct costs, the fees it charges must be compensatory for the work needed to satisfy the requests. To the extent it waives fees, it would be required to add those amounts to the fees paid by others. If there is a broad public interest--as here--in making data broadly available to those with insufficient resources to pay the direct costs, it turns to the Legislature and Governor to make those funds available.

In this instance, though, perhaps the rules could be read to mean that the MHA--a voluntary, not-for-profit organization with a strong emphasis on education programs--could make a single request on behalf of a group of hospitals who would share the data, reducing the cost for any one institution.

Through the five-week course, participants will explore fundamental topics in
the science of safety, patient safety culture, teamwork and
communication, patient-centered care, and strategies for assessing and
improving care. The course workload is two to five hours per week, which
includes up to two hours of video instruction, as well as readings and
assignments.

Clinicians, hospital administrators, students, patients—indeed anyone
with an interest in this topic—should consider enrolling. Students
receive a statement of accomplishment upon passing the course.

@TerryFairbanks, director of the National Center for Human Factors in Healthcare, sends this story from the Daily Courier-Observer with a note, "Great story of how one patient can transform a hospital." Indeed, also a great story about the transformational power of teamwork that extends throughout the front lines! And the leadership that made this all possible. Excerpts:

Canton-Potsdam Hospital, a not-for-profit facility with its
main campus located in Potsdam, New York, was recognized with an “A”
Hospital Safety Score by The Leapfrog Group, an independent national
nonprofit run by employers and other large purchasers of health
benefits. The A score was awarded in the latest update to the Hospital
Safety Score, the A, B, C, D or F scores assigned to U.S. hospitals
based on preventable medical errors, injuries accidents, and infections.
The Hospital Safety Score [is] the first and only hospital
safety rating to be peer-reviewed in the Journal of Patient Safety
(April 2013),

“This
is an honor that is shared across our organization,” said David B.
Acker, FACHE, President and CEO of Canton-Potsdam Hospital. “It actually
derives from the courage of a patient and her husband, who spoke to me
back in 2009 about an infection acquired at our hospital that
drastically curtailed their involvement in the community and enjoyment
of life. The husband subsequently spoke to our entire staff through a
series of meetings. The couple’s story was life-altering for them and
for us and they share in this honor,” he said.

“Their experience
set us on the path to a total redesign of our processes, extensive
training in and reinforcement of best practices, investments in new
equipment, commitment to gathering and using data to drive decisions,
and a total, unwavering dedication to patient safety, always, in every
situation,” said Mr. Acker, who credited everyone from physicians to
housekeeping staff for working as a team to approach safety and quality
proactively.

Thursday, May 23, 2013

In honor of the yarzheit (anniversity) of my mother's death, I am reprinting a post from March 14, 2007. The message remains important for all families, and I think she would have liked me to remind you.

In the story below, there is an important sentence: We discussed
possible actions with Dr. X and decided to halt all invasive treatments,
a course that my family has long agreed to.

I know from
personal experience what this simple bit of family planning can mean for
the terminally ill patient and for his or her relatives. My Mom's
living will had this directive, among others:

That no
extraordinary measures be used to prolong my life if in the sole
judgment of my daughter and my physician such measures will not restore
me to a level of life that is commensurate with the mental and, to a
lesser degree, physical standards by which I have been fortunate enough
to live. Without limitation, such extraordinary measures include cardiac
and/or pulmonary resuscitation, mechanical respiration, tube
(intravenous and/or nesogastric) feeding and antibiotics.

She
wrote and signed this in the early 1990's, when she was in her early
70's and therefore likely well before it would be likely to be applied.
The application of her directive occurred two years ago after an
accident left her with a severe head injury and internal bleeding in her
brain. When it became clear that, in her words, "the application of
life-sustaining procedures would serve only to artificially prolong the
moment of my death", my sisters and I were empowered to have a short and
decisive conversation to remove the respirator and other measures that
were keeping her alive. With no regrets on our part, she died just a few
hours later.

Afterwards, the ICU nurse kindly reaffirmed our
decision, saying to me: "You, of all people, know that we can keep
people alive forever. You did the right thing. She would have spent the
rest of her life on her back in a nursing home, unable to talk or move.
Surely, she would not have wanted that."

A living will with this
kind of advance directive is one of the greatest gifts a parent can give
to his or her children. If you don't have one, or your parents don't,
please have one prepared and discuss it with your relative while you are
both still able to do so.

Wednesday, May 22, 2013

Best
(worst) hotel service story I have heard: My friend Ray is taking a
nap in his room in the afternoon and has put up the "do not disturb"
sign." The maid had not yet made up the room. Someone from the front
desk calls on the room telephone, wakes him up, and asks, "Why do you
have the 'do not disturb sign' up?"

Have we gone overboard in hospitals in our desire to minimize pain? Several years ago, there was a lot of effort to require hospitals to inquire of patients where on the 0-10 pain scale they fell. This was a good idea for many reasons.

But has it led to overuse of opiates like morphine, particularly those self-administered using patient-controlled analgesia (PCA) pumps?There have many articles on this topic expressing concern about depression of respiration to the point that the patient dies. The Happy Hospitalist explains:

Why is PCA morphine dangerous? Too much medication can cause patients
to stop breathing. Opiates, often inappropriately referred to as
narcotics by doctors and nurses, suppress the central nervous system's
respiratory drive and increases the risk of life threatening apnea.
This is the cause of death in a heroin overdose. This is the cause of
death in the epidemic of prescription opiate drug overdoses heard about
on the news. Many PCA morphine order sets require continuous oxygen
saturation monitoring and frequent documentation of respiratory rate as
safety mechanisms. This is to protect the patient from experiencing
prolonged hypoxemia as a result of too much sedation when no family is
available at the bedside.

The Joint Commission published a sentinel event alert on the matter in August 2012. The JC addresses the question of monitoring by suggesting that hospitals should:Create and implement policies and procedures for the ongoing clinical monitoring of patients receiving opioid therapy by performing serial assessments of the quality and adequacy of respiration and the depth of sedation. The organization will need to determine how often the assessments should take place and define the period of time that is appropriate to adequately observe trends. Monitoring should be individualized according to the patient’s response.

We have to recognize, though, that while ICU patients might have continuous monitoring of respiration, the vast majority of patients on PCA pumps are those on the regular medical/surgical floors of the hospital. They include "normal" (i.e., otherwise healthy) people recovering from orthopaedic surgery and other procedures. But that normality does not exempt them from the kind of respiratory depression cited in the literature.

What is the systemic solution to ensure that the possibility of such a result is minimized? The patients with PCA pumps might have continuous oxygen saturation monitoring, but most certainly do not have continuous respiratory monitoring. The "frequent documentation of respiratory rate" can fall victim to the many other responsibilities and distractions that nurses face. (It was Anita Tucker at Harvard, I believe, who documented that nurses only spend 20% of their time at the bedside. As this article reports, "She learned that nurses' time ticks by in minutes or fractions of minutes; their average task took just two minutes.") Given the demands on nurses and the poor design of work flows with which most of them live, there is a some probability that a percentage of nurses will not accurately assess patients' respiratory rates.

While there are technical fixes to the problem of continuous respiratory monitoring that might prove useful*, I wonder how much of this problem is related to the antecedent decision to reduce pain to a very low level. Is there a standard of care that is presumed to be appropriate by hospitals? Is the goal to drive the pain level down to a 1 or 2, or is the goal to reach a level of 3 or 4? Is there a thought given to the relative risks of different doses for a patient on a PAC morphine pump when the two goals are compared? For sure, reaching a pain level of 0 is noteworthy, but not if it is achieved by killing the patient.

---

Disclosure: I am on the advisory board of a company that makes and sells instruments of this sort.

Monday, May 20, 2013

One of the signs of political sickness in America is the degree to which some Republican governors, apparently out of sheer spite for President Obama, have decided to be both stupid and cruel to citizens in their own states. I refer to those governors who have chosen not to permit their Medicaid-eligible residents to participate in the federally funded health care insurance subsidies under Obamacare (aka, Affordable Care Act.)

The Act fills in current gaps in coverage for the poorest Americans by creating a
minimum Medicaid income eligibility level across the country. Beginning in 2014 coverage for the newly eligible adults will be fully
funded by the federal government for three years. It will phase down to
90% by 2020. People newly eligible for Medicaid will receive a benchmark benefit or
benchmark­ equivalent package that includes the minimum essential
benefits provided in the Affordable Insurance Exchanges. The law includes a number of program and funding improvements to help ensure
that people can receive long-term care services and supports in their
home or the community.

I think there are about a dozen governors who have turned their back on their citizens. Here's one example from Pennsylvania:

Pennsylvania Gov. Tom Corbett (R) announced Tuesday that his state
will turn down the Medicaid expansion, becoming the first governor of a
blue state to officially say no to the coverage provision of the
Affordable Care Act that the Supreme Court made optional.

“At this time, without serious reforms, it would be financially
unsustainable for Pennsylvania taxpayers, and I cannot recommend a
dramatic Medicaid expansion,” Corbett wrote in a letter to U.S. Health
and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius.

The decision will please conservative advocates who are urging
leaders to stonewall Obamacare implementation. But it’s a blow to the
many thousands of uninsured Pennsylvanians who would have received
coverage through the program, which extends Medicaid eligibility to
Americans up to 133 percent of the poverty line for participating
states.

Something is seriously wrong with these people. They are intentionally creating an uninsured underclass in their states. I hope that the successors to these governors will see the light.

So much more to explore in this highly useful and accessible tool as the
state debate over cost and market dominance continues.

Except for one thing: I'm not sure what John means about state debate over market dominance in Massachusetts. Sure, the new state law has a provision that:

Establishes a new “Cost and Market Impact Review” to examine provider organizations to determine whether any provider's market concentration exceeds certain federally-established parameters. If the Commission determines, based on its review, that actions of a provider constitute unfair practices or unfair methods of competition or other violations of law, the Commission must refer the matter to the Attorney General for further action.

The problem is that that game is over. There is no way the Massachusetts AG will have the authority to break up an existing health care system. If s/he tried, the legal process for getting there would take forever.

No, the focus in Massachusetts remains with a misplaced belief that moving the system to one based on capitation will solve the cost problems. (Look at these comments by the chairperson of the state health policy commission.) In addition, there is to be a consideration of the potential for consumer-driven health plans (those with a high deductible component or a health savings account) to influence customer behavior in the selection of doctors and hospitals.

While I am not sanguine about the efficacy of the latter, a condition for its success would be real-time total price and quality transparency, at the consumer level. As Barry Carol notes in a recent comment on this blog, "Perhaps CHIA in MA can lead the way toward true price and quality
transparency in healthcare so both patients and referring doctors can
much more easily identify the most cost-effective high quality providers
and steer their business to them."

Saturday, May 18, 2013

An intriguing story has developed in Kentucky. Several months ago, the UK's Kentucky Children's Hospital announced that it had suspended its pediatric cardiothoracic program, pending an internal review.

1. The number of surgeries Dr. Mark Plunkett, chief of cardiothoracic surgery, performed in the previous three years.
2. The date of Plunkett's last surgery.
3. Payments received for surgeries performed by Plunkett in 2010 and 2011.
4. The mortality rate of pediatric cardiothoracic surgery cases in the previous three years.
5. Documentation related to any evaluations/accreditations of the program in those three years.

She did not request the names of, or any other identifying information about, the patients. UK
answered questions 1 and 3 but declined on the rest, citing patient
confidentiality. UK said Plunkett performed so few surgeries that it
might be possible to identify individual patients.

The reporter appealed to the state's Attorney General, who ruled in her favor. The University has now appealed that ruling in state court. UK's general counsel said:

The open records requests impact three competing values — the right of
the public to know what transpires at a public institution, the right of
individual patients to privacy and the obligation of the health-care
providers to engage in critical self-examination so as to improve
patient quality and safety.

In a really sad day for both open inquiry and freedom of information,
the University of Kentucky last week sued a reporter for its public
radio station.

If UK is trying to manage its image, it has made a huge blunder.

Stonewalling on this request only makes it appear that the university
is more interested in keeping under wraps whatever has gone wrong in
Plunkett's department rather than protecting the confidentiality of its
patients — living or dead.

When the story began back in December, questions were raised. The radio station reported:

Kentucky Children’s Hospital treats some of the sickest and smallest
patients from across central and eastern Kentucky. But for the past
several weeks, pediatric heart surgeries have been referred to other
hospitals. ...UK Healthcare is reviewing its
program, but the reasons why are unclear.

UK Healthcare officials have not identified what prompted the review,
but they say it is limited to the pediatric cardiothoracic surgery
program, not any other pediatric areas or the adult heart program.“We’re
looking at what can we do best and how do we best deliver the services
and the care that kids need,” said Dr. Carmel Wallace, Chair of UK's
Department of Pediatrics.UK’s head of surgery, the chief medical
officer, and Dr. Michael Karpf, the Executive Vice President for Health
Affairs, all would not comment for this story. Dr. Mark Plunkett, the
surgeon at the center of the review, also declined to be interviewed.

One of the trustees said that he thought UK should consolidate its pediatric heart program with the
University of Louisville because of high operational costs.

So are there economic reasons? Are there reasons related to sustaining a high quality clinical environment?

UK's position is understandable if we take as a given the hospital's obligation to preserve patient confidentiality under HIPAA and also the need to protect the peer review process as applied to clinical decision-making.

But it is giving the impression of stonewalling by not explaining much about the reason for the program's suspension. That kind of image is usually not good for a public institution.

I wonder if there is a middle ground that might be negotiated here between the university and itself.

Great cover story in the New York Times today on how the new private owners of Bayonne
Hospital made it for-profit and canceled their insurance contracts. By
becoming out-of-network they were able to jack up their prices and make a
lot of money. Talk about gaming the system!

This is not about the relative prices in the hospital's chargemaster, nor is it about gaming the system. It is the system.

The name of the game is to have sufficient market power in a geographic area that you can demand higher than market prices from the insurance companies.

In recent years, Bayonne Medical put up digital billboards highlighting
the short waits in its emergency rooms in an effort to attract more
patients. Insurers complained that the hospital was seeking to take
advantage of the higher rates it could charge.

Community leaders in Bayonne, fearing the hospital could close, said the
buyers were always candid about the methods they intended to use to
make the hospital a profitable enterprise. In 2009, Horizon Blue Cross Blue Shield of New Jersey filed an
injunction in New Jersey Superior Court saying Bayonne Medical’s owners
had “flatly rejected” and refused to negotiate an in-network hospital
contract with Horizon. When the existing agreement expired in early
2009, Horizon said Bayonne sharply increased its prices. Bayonne’s
in-network charges to Horizon averaged $13,000 a day in 2008. A year
later, when it was out of network, the charges soared to $29,000, the
insurer said in a spring 2009 news release.

The two eventually settled in 2011, and Horizon became an in-network
insurance provider. A spokesman for Horizon declined to comment on
Bayonne Medical’s charges, citing terms of the settlement agreement.

Still, many other large insurance companies, including Cigna, United
Healthcare and Aetna, remain out of network at Bayonne and are paying
the higher bills.

Aetna’s internal data showed that Bayonne Medical’s emergency room
charges jumped again in 2012 and are running 6 to 12 times as high as
those of surrounding hospitals.

Now, Aetna is one of the largest insurance companies in America. But in the Bayonne area, that size means squat. Bayonne Medical Center, by an accident of geography, is viewed as an essential medical center by patients. The hospital's owners are extracting monopoly-like profits as a result.

Unusual? No. In Boston, we have had a larger variant on this, as the Partners Healthcare System, dominant in the region, has extracted above-market prices from the insurers in town. PHS proved its ability to do so well over a decade ago, when Tufts Health Plan objected to paying the high rates PHS was demanding. Partners threatened to drop THP from its network, and the health plan folded within 72 hours. That set the stage for rate deals that have generated (my guess) an extra $200 million per year for this large system. Other hospitals were left to fight over the scraps. PHS used the extra money to expand further, enhancing its market power year by year. (The only company that could have taken PHS on, Blue Cross Blue Shield of MA, which has corresponding market power on the insurer side of the ledger, chose to be complicit.)

And it will be more common over the coming years. The impetus coming out of the so-called Affordable Care Act (aka, Obamacare) is for hospital systems to consolidate into accountable care organizations to become dominant in their market area. Ostensibly, this is to better manage care across the spectrum of care. Part of the reason, too, is to have a broader pool of patients as pricing moves to more of a risk basis.

The Federal Trade Commission has determined that it does not have the authority to deal with these increases in market power. An FTC commissioner said:

As in Bayonne, we can expect continued upward price pressure across the country as these large systems hold a hammer over the head of insurers. So why it is called the Affordable Care Act?

By the way, let's review this quote: The two eventually settled in 2011, and Horizon became an in-network
insurance provider. A spokesman for Horizon declined to comment on
Bayonne Medical’s charges, citing terms of the settlement agreement.

With all this fuss about the chargemaster, reporters and some patient advocates are again missing the point. Let's make public the actual rates charged by hospitals and physician groups.

Friday, May 17, 2013

This event on May 29
(3:30-5:30) at the Metropolitan Museum in NY is worthwhile for any health care
provider who encounters people with dementia and for family members of
persons with any form of dementia.

Description:

Please join us for a screening of I Remember Better When I Paint,a film by Eric Ellena and Berna Huebner. I Remember Better When I Paint is
the first international documentary about the positive impact of art
and other creative therapies on people with Alzheimer’s and how these
approaches can change the way we look at the disease. Among those who
are featured are noted doctors and Yasmin Aga Khan, president of
Alzheimer’s Disease International and daughter of Rita Hayworth, who had
Alzheimer’s.

Following
the screening, filmmaker Berna Huebner will be joined by Dr. Sam Gandy,
Chair of the Mount Sinai Alzheimer's Disease Research Center, and Gail
Sheehy, bestselling author of Passages in Caregiving: Turning Chaos into Confidence, for a lively discussion moderated by Carolyn Halpin-Healy, Founder and Executive Director of Arts & Minds.

Thursday, May 16, 2013

We go back to infrastructure for a break from health care (although the two are intimately related in many ways.) Some of you will remember my story about the use of cowbells to forestall too-low trucks from hitting underpasses along the Boston river roads. Now comes this story from Australia, where waterfalls do the trick!

Wednesday, May 15, 2013

I admire President Obama in many ways, but I think he does not understand one important element of leadership. He has repeated the following behavior: Something goes wrong in his administration. He expresses anger about it, and says such behavior is inexcusable, as though it is someone else's responsibility. Then, someone falls on his sword and resigns, or someone is blamed and is fired.

A strong leader would take personal responsibility, say what he is going to do to fix the problem, and then permit himself to be held accountable for the required changes. The President's approach emphasizes his own leadership weakness.

The two most recent examples are the inadequate steps taken by the military to avoid sexual harassment and the improper use of the IRS to investigate organizations of a certain political persuasion. How did he react?

President Obama said today he has “no tolerance” for sexual assault
in the military and said perpetrators are “betraying the uniform that
they’re wearing,” even as a new Pentagon report indicates the problem is
growing.

“For those who are in uniform who’ve experienced sexual assault, I
want them to hear directly from their commander in chief that I’ve got
their backs. I will support them. And we’re not going to tolerate this
stuff. And there will be accountability,” Obama said at a joint White
House press conference with South Korean President Park Geun-hye.

“I expect consequences,” he said. “I don’t want just more speeches
or, you know, awareness programs or training, but ultimately folks look
the other way. If we find out somebody’s engaging in this stuff, they’ve
got to be held accountable, prosecuted, stripped of their positions,
court-martialed, fired, dishonorably discharged — period. It’s not
acceptable.”

The President is the commander-in-chief and has been for over four years. How about something that indicates the buck stops with him?Anybody who knows me knows that I personal abhor this kind of behavior. Although I instituted programs several years ago to reduce its likelihood, I have to accept responsibility for the fact that our efforts have not been strong enough or thorough enough. I could offer excuses, but as people in the military say, "No excuse, sir." I intend to work with the Joints Chief of Staff to do a top-down evaluation of what we have done so far, what works, and what doesn't work. A part of my plan will certainly be to protect people who report this kind of behavior--whether victims or observers, whether subordinates or supervisors. But beyond that, we will borrow the best of ideas that have been successfully employed by businesses and institutions to eliminate this kind of behavior. I will publishing monthly reports indicating our progress. The people of this country and in the military have a right to hold me accountable.

I have now had the opportunity to review
the Treasury Department watchdog’s report on its investigation of IRS
personnel who improperly targeted conservative groups applying for
tax-exempt status. And the report’s findings are intolerable and
inexcusable. The federal government must conduct itself in a way that’s
worthy of the public’s trust, and that’s especially true for the IRS.
The IRS must apply the law in a fair and impartial way, and its
employees must act with utmost integrity. This report shows that some of
its employees failed that test.

I’ve directed Secretary Lew to hold those
responsible for these failures accountable, and to make sure that each
of the Inspector General’s recommendations are implemented quickly, so
that such conduct never happens again. But regardless of how this
conduct was allowed to take place, the bottom line is, it was wrong.
Public service is a solemn privilege. I expect everyone who serves in
the federal government to hold themselves to the highest ethical and
moral standards. So do the American people. And as President, I intend
to make sure our public servants live up to those standards every day.

The president is chief executive officer of one branch of the government and has been for over four years. How about something that indicates the buck stops with him?

The IRS is part of my administration, and I take responsibility for any misdeeds and impropriety that occur in that administration. It would not be enough for me to say that some people acted outside of their authority and in a manner inconsistent with our political and constitutional system. If they acted in such a way, it might reflect their wish to do something that they mistakenly thought I would condone. Or more innocently, it might just reflect misjudgement, misunderstanding, or bad training. Whatever the reason, I have not done enough to ensure that the standards I hold dear have been maintained in my administration.I have directed a top-to-bottom review of our training and compliance programs. I will publish the results of that review for all to see, and I will act on that review with specific steps and milestones and provide public progress reports on our implementation of that plan. Meanwhile, I request that any organization that has felt itself to be abused in this manner to file a statement of complaint on a new public website, and I will ensure that the resolution of that complaint is published for all to see on that website within 60 days. I will also request any IRS employee who feels that any organization has been abused in this manner to file an anonymous statement of complaint
on a new public website, and I will ensure that the resolution of that
complaint is published for all to see on that website within 60 days.

Unrealistic? Showing political weakness? Just the opposite.

On the organizational level, by taking ownership of the problem, the President would invite the cooperation of people in the government to help solve it. In contrast, the way he now frames it is an invitation for people to hunker down. If they see something wrong, they will fear reporting it. The president needs to learn from some examples of leaders. In my book Goal Play!, I relate some of those stories.

Here's one from health care:

In an article by Dr. Charles Denham, he relates the
practice of nursing chief Jeannette Ives-Erickson, Senior Vice
President For Patient Care and Chief Nurse at Massachusetts General
Hospital. When there is a screw-up in nursing, she calls the involved nurse into her
office and asks one question: “Did you do this on purpose?” When the nurse
answers, “No,” then Jeannette says, “Well then it is my fault. … Errors stem
from system flaws. … I am responsible for creating safe systems.”
Chuck notes, “In a few short moments with a caregiver after
an accident, the leader declares ownership of the systems envelope, and the
performance envelope of her caregivers, and creates a healing constructive
opportunity to prevent a repeat occurrence.”
He warns us that it is easy to “automatically fall in a
name-blame-shame cycle, citing violated policies, and ignore the laws of human
performance and our responsibility as leaders.”

Here's one from the oil industry:

A number of years ago,
Tom Botts was involved in a tragedy aboard an oil rig in which he personally
had to call off the search for men missing at sea. Deeply shaken, when he later
moved on to be Executive Vice President for Shell Oil Company’s exploration and
production activities in Europe, he decided that he would implement the most
comprehensive program possible to protect workers’ safety at these remote
outposts in the ocean. Notwithstanding that new program—the best in the
industry—two men lost their lives on a North Sea oil rig when they mistakenly
went into a portion of the facility that should have been off-limits. It would
have been easy to blame the two men who, after all, entered a prohibited area.
Instead, Tom launched a thorough, top-to-bottom review of the organization. He
explained:
We decided to be as open and transparent
about the incident as possible and went through a “Deep Learning” journey involving
hundreds of people that examined in detail all the root causes that contributed
to the accident to get a clear picture of the system that produced the
fatalities. Even though the two men who were killed could have made better
decisions, my senior leadership team and I could find places where we ‘owned’
the system that led to the tragedy.
It was a defining moment for us when we, as
senior leaders, were finally able to identify our own decisions and our own
part in the system (however well intended) that contributed to the fatalities.
That gave license to others deeper in the organization to go through the same
reflection and find their own part in the system, even though they weren’t
directly involved in the incident.
And finally, another from health care:

Paul Wiles, former Pres­ident and CEO of Novant
Health in Winston-Salem, NC, once told me and a group of hospital CEOs a
heart-wrenching story about an infant’s death from sepsis in his hospital,
which was tracked to an MRSA (antibiotic-resistant staph) infection. The
infection was part of a spread of a bug in his neo-natal intensive care unit
(NICU) that reached 18 infants in all and may have contributed to the deaths of
two others. “This was a direct result of staff not washing their hands
appropriately,” he said. Since that event, “We have been on a relentless hand
hygiene campaign.”
The crux of his entire presentation was this comment: “My
objective today is to confess. ‘I am accountable for those unnecessary deaths
in the NICU. It is my responsibility to establish a culture of safety. I had
inadvertently relinquished those duties,’” he noted, by focusing
instead on the traditional set of executive duties (financial, planning, and
such).
This president came into office having never really run an organization of size and complexity. He has played for years in the political environment, where the blame game is part of the culture and is viewed as a way to win the next election. Now, however, it is his last term. It would be a good time for him to learn how to be a leader of the executive branch. By the way, it would also be good politics, as it would help establish him as a strong leader and not a weak one. The dividends would flow to other aspects of his presidency.

On February 11, @lucienengelen (Lucien Engelen) announced to his world that he would stop reading and replying to email as of April 2. As he later noted:

After I previously attempted to make my work more focussed in other
ways it turned out to a large extent that 250 to 300 emails a day made
this impossible.

An analysis of my incoming emails taught me that
some 70 percent of the information sent to me also was also on our
intranet. It was clear that email was increasingly used as a some kind
of chat — some up to 10 other messages cc'd to easily 10 people each.
For that, I think, we have other more appropriate tools, such as our
UMCN, Yammer or social media.

I therefore decided to stop email. Just stop. Not just bcc or cc, but
everything. Now you might think: "One can’t just stop" — and that is
true. This would not be possible for everyone, but it fits with my role
as bit of a rebel (with a cause ;-).

In support of this decision, he posted this marvelous video called "Business Practices that Refuse to Die: #No. 44, Email."

How'd it go? Very well. Lucien summarizes:

I can firmly tell you that it already saves me a lot of time:
approximately 1.5 to 2 hours per day. In addition to that, my colleagues
are surprised that I can find time time for a cup of coffee, pick-up
the phone and respond to messages more swiftly through other channels
like social media.

I'm not quite this far along, but I am sympathetic. Beyond the inherent flaws in email as a tool for collaboration, it is also a tool for avoiding personal interaction. It is an enabler of passive aggressive behavior. If I hadn't left my hospital job, I was planning on an experiment: Asking people not to use email every Monday. I was looking forward to the idea that a person with an idea, a suggestion, a comment, or a complaint would have to get up and walk a few meters to talk to another person. I felt that people would quickly solve their problems or share ideas and do so in a manner that would avoid the "email trees" described in the video. By looking at one another, too, they would send subtle messages using body language, tone, and humor that are not possible in email messages. There would be fewer misunderstandings. People would get to know, and maybe even like, one another.

In my book Goal Play!, I tell the story of how we used to arrange informal dinners for the managers at BIDMC.

We'd get a group of 15 to 20 mid-level managers to an off-site location
for conversation, group games (like “two truths and a lie” and Trivial
Pursuit), dinner, and wine to get to know one another.

For us, the game gatherings, of which there were several,
were a great opportunity for people to open up and relate in new ways.

“I have been sending you emails for five years, but I never
met you,” was one typical reaction. “You go hang-gliding!” said another. “You
have how many children?!” would be another.

People got to know one another as individuals and members of
their community, separate from their work responsibilities. They discovered
that they enjoyed each other’s company. Later, back in the office, they
remembered and treated one another with much less of a bureaucratic attitude.
They became more helpful, considerate, and empathic towards their colleagues.

Think about it. The supposedly utilitarian and powerful connecting force of email had become perverted into a means for keeping people separate. We have to start breaking this down. Bravo to Lucien for going the distance by risking an alternative view of the world.

I was dramatically wrong in a recent blog post when I suggested that the MA Center for Health Information and Analysis had failed to make broadly available an all-payer claims database. I apologize to the agency and to Executive Director Áron Boros. I print below the full text of a reply from Commissioner Boros which, for some reason, I did not receive earlier. I'd like to offer a reasonable excuse for my error, but--having done a root cause analysis--can best attribute it to the equivalent of diagnostic anchoring. I believed that CHIA had not acted to free the data. I conducted a (clearly incomplete) web search for information on the topic and found nothing to suggest an alternate view, so I concluded that I was correct. A good lesson all around.

Here's Commissioner Boros' complete comment to me, which will also be posted on the original site, along with an addendum by me in the text.

Paul,

While I
appreciate your continued advocacy for transparency and, in particular,
your focus on patients, I am concerned that this post does not reflect
any research on your part into the current state of transparency in
Massachusetts.

My agency, the
Center for Health Information and Analysis (CHIA), is responsible for
collecting, enhancing, and sharing the data in the all-payer claims
database (APCD), among many other data sets. You are wrong when you
state that CHIA has “failed to act.” Even a cursory look at our website
would confirm this. www.mass.gov/chia/apcd.

We also recently updated the fee schedule for access to the APCD (http://www.mass.gov/chia/docs/g/chia-ab/ab-13-03-apcd-fee-schedule.pdf).
The fee schedule reflects a careful consideration of appropriate
pricing for this kind of data including, among other things, a public
hearing and comment process. The fee schedule also provides for full or
partial fee waivers for a variety of applicants, including students and
qualified researchers in certain circumstances.

I
am proud of our accomplishments in increasing data transparency, and
confess to a little bit of frustration that your post appears to assume
that we have not been working to fulfill this mission without a minimum
of research into what has actually happened over the last year. In
addition to the public release, the APCD is currently also being used to
help implement to the Affordable Care Act, is being used to support the
Division of Insurance in some of its market monitoring activities, and
is being used internally by CHIA for health care research and analysis.

Looking
forward, there is much more to come. As Pat G mentions, last year’s
Cost Containment bill provides for new access to the APCD. We are in the
process of revising our regulations to reflect the requirements of the
new bill, and anticipate releasing a proposed revision in May. Moreover,
the APCD will be used over the next 3 years to accelerate other health
care reform initiatives, including data sharing with providers under the
Executive Office of Health and Human Services’ State Innovation Model
grant. http://innovation.cms.gov/initiatives/State-Innovations-Model-Testing/index.html

I would be happy to discuss the APCD with you more. As should be clear from my comment, there is a lot to say.

Hurricane Sandy first struck the Caribbean and then the entire East
Coast of the United States at the end of October 2012. The storm
smacked into New York and New Jersey especially hard, impacting
millions. The story of how the largest health care system in the
region, North Shore–LIJ, operated throughout to ensure
patients and staff were protected and supported, under fierce
circumstances, is one that communities and hospitals everywhere can
learn from. This is our focus for the May
16, 2013, WIHI: Reliable Practices for Responding to Natural Disasters:
Lessons from North Shore-LIJ and Hurricane Sandy,
featuring three leaders from NS-LIJ who were responsible for every kind
of decision imaginable before, during, and after the storm.

Some of the decisions included transferring hundreds of nursing home
residents out of harm’s way, taking in patients from other
hospitals, assisting at area shelters, buying up fuel for ambulances,
and opening up a resource center for hospital staff whose homes and
neighborhoods had been torn apart and flooded. One of the back stories
to NS-LIJ’s response is the degree to which it was built upon
critical lessons learned during Hurricane Irene, a year before. In
2009, there was the H1N1 outbreak. In each instance, the health system
did things well, and saw where it fell short; now that Hurricane Sandy
has come and gone, this same type of assessment continues.

Health care organizations and first responders must prepare for many
types of crises and disasters. Reflecting on the recent Boston Marathon
bombings, which killed three and seriously injured over 200 (NEJM,
April 24, 2013), authors Arthur Kellermann and Kobi Pelag write,
“The best way hospitals can prepare is to base their response
on a strong foundation of daily health care delivery.” So,
routine and reliably safe practices, guided by continuous quality
improvement, is lesson one for emergency planning. WIHI host Madge
Kaplan invites you to bring your experiences and your interest to this
timely discussion on May 16.Please
click here to enroll.